Kalolsavam| Away from spotlight, yet promoting creative expressions in Arabic, Sanskrit
The Hindu
Explore the Arabic & Sanskrit Kalolsavam, two unique festivals gaining wide following among students. Participate in events like Paadakam, Ashtapadi & Koodiyattam. Discover the Arabic & Sanskrit Kalolsavam, two unique festivals gaining wide student following. Participate in events like Paadakam, Ashtapadi & Koodiyattam.
Away from the spotlight and mainstream attention of the general events at the State School Arts Festival runs the Arabic Kalolsavam and Sanskrit Kalolsavam, but in the close to two decades of their existence as separate entities, these festivals have gained quite a wide following among students who learn Arabic and Sanskrit in school. Participation in these festivals are limited to such students.
At the Kadappakada Sports Club, the main venue of the Arabic Kalolsavam, S. Gafoor from Kondotty is getting ready to watch a play, based on the Israeli onslaught on Gaza, in which his son Mohammed Rinfan is playing the lead role.
“I work in Saudi Arabia. I decided to apply for leave and come here during this time because he is performing at such a prestigious festival. He had won the best actor award at the district level,” says Gafoor.
Muhammed Aboobacker, an Arabic teacher from High School Pavumba in Kollam, who translated Santosh Echikkanam’s Biryani to Arabic for his school’s drama, has been a regular at the festival since 2008. But, increasingly, schools are depending on theatre professionals, who don’t necessarily know Arabic, to prepare their teams for the play with the Arabic teachers taking care of just the language part. Quite a few of the competing teams stage Arabic versions of popular Malayalam plays, while a few make plays based on contemporary issues.
“One of the highlights of the festival is the Arabic seminar, in which Arabic language scholars from across the State participate. Yesterday, we had a full house here,” says S. Ahmed Ukhail, convener of the Arabic Kalolsavam.
An interesting event is dictionary making, in which the contestants are provided a short article from which they have to prepare a dictionary of Arabic words, arranged alphabetically and marked as verb or noun. Arabic competitions in monoact, Kathaprasangam, group song, recitation, story writing, quiz, and translation have all witnessed enthusiastic participation.
Less than a kilometre away is the Jawahar Balabhavan, the venue of the Sanskrit Kalolsavam, where a tight competition in Paadakam is ongoing. A traditional temple art form which involves storytelling using Sanskrit slokas and Malayalam narration, it is believed to have branched out from Chakyarkoothu.
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